Candidates take battle to North Carolina
By Jack Mercola | May 17, 2012Obama will have to continue campaigning fiercely in order to achieve a repeat victory.
Obama will have to continue campaigning fiercely in order to achieve a repeat victory.
Support for a ban on same-sex marriage in North Carolina may stem from a more conservative, older voter base.
Marriage between one man and one woman is now recognized as the only legal union under state law.
Duke’s one-stop on-campus early voting site has attracted more than 2,000 voters, helping Durham County cast more votes so far than any other county in North Carolina in this year’s primary election.
President Barack Obama urged Congress to keep college affordable for the seven million students currently burdened by student loans in an address Tuesday.
Affordability, access and technology will shape the future of American higher education, panelists said in a forum Friday.
As the state’s gubernatorial election heats up, candidates are courting North Carolina college students on the issue of education
Europe needs to strive for increased unity if the European financial crisis is to be solved, said Dr. Ursula von der Leyen, German federal minister for labor and social affairs.
Starting a business can be sweet and tart, and sometimes involves an assortment of local fresh fruit.
Modern media stereotypes of Southern politics may be outdated.
The United States should help Iranian human rights activists in their efforts to attain a more democratic society, said Shirin Ebadi, recipient of the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize.
In the midst of a battered economy, Puerto Rican college campuses have been battlegrounds of differing ideologies, a Puerto Rican scholar said Thursday.
The 2008 financial crisis was caused by a number of failures in both the private and public sectors, and those failings have not been fully addressed, Rep.
Red-shirt sophomore Tyree Watkins was dismissed from the Duke football team Wednesday
Mitt Romney continued to forge ahead in the race for the Republican nomination Tuesday.
Violent crime rates spiked in the Bull City, despite a downward trend in the city’s total crime from 2010 to 2012.
Some members of the Triangle community will spend their summer on a bike, stopping only to sleep and build.
Potential cuts to higher education after the presidential election could result in reduced federal funds for U.S. universities—including Duke.
Photography can illuminate the challenges of refugees as they adjust to life in their adopted countries.
Some members of Durham’s Latino community seek greater resources and community outreach.